Took it without looking now I'm looking up the side effects
Pill identifier said that I should be dying next
My regrets, oh my regrets

Over here overstimulated
Let's get one thing clear bitch, I am the greatest
You are not my peer, you are overrated
Know you mad I made it, know you hate it
But I'm in this bitch like

And if my heart goes out right now
This goes out to you
If my heart goes out right now
This goes out to you

(Talking)
What the fuck did you give me?
Oh, no no Chill chill
Huh?
Are you okay?
Did you see that?
I don't know what you're talking about
Relax, Relax
Get me out of here
Why would you do this to me?!
Someone give her some water

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About “Overstimulated”

Streams of consciousness appear to be a recurring theme in this album. This song proves this, as Aiko is walking the listener through her mind. There is sexual tension as well as intoxication, so at times the song appears to seem very dreamy. This is used to express the psychedelic atmosphere of the drugs.

What have the artists said about the song?

“Overstimulated” is about a stimulant, so that’s where I start talking about cocaine and Adderall — which, unfortunately, I’ve also experimented with. And [when I was recording] that song, I was on one and I was scared.
We were already in album mode and we had to finish, so I felt pressure a little bit. Unfortunately, I turned to the wrong method of getting something done sooner. I love the song, though; I’m not going to lie. But I remember thinking, ‘If my heart goes out right now.’ I couldn’t stop singing this song and trying to get it right. But I felt like I learned my lesson, because I went back [later] and, of course, I perfected it. Then I realized I can do it without that. I definitely made more sense of it afterwards. I’m almost 30 years old, so I feel like I don’t have to do those things anymore to get things done. Shortcuts are not the answer.
Those types of substances give you that false — it’s not even confidence anymore. You just feel like you’re on top of the world. But it’s not coming from a place of real self-love. It’s just superficial, which is why it [the story] goes into “Bad Trip”. Because when you come down from all that stuff, you’re like, ‘What in the world? This is not right.’